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Earth & Climate

Unlocking the Secrets of Milky Seas: A 400-Year Database of Bioluminescent Wonders

Milky seas are a rare bioluminescent phenomenon where vast areas of the ocean glow at night, sometimes for months. This glow, likely caused by Vibrio harveyi bacteria, has been reported by sailors for centuries but remains poorly understood due to its rarity and remote locations, mainly in the Indian Ocean. Researchers have compiled a 400-year database of sightings, using historical records and satellite data, revealing that milky seas are linked to climatic patterns like the Indian Ocean Dipole and El Nino.

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For generations, sailors have reported a mysterious phenomenon: vast areas of the ocean glowing steadily at night, sometimes for months on end. The light is bright enough to read by and is oddly similar to the green and white aura cast by glow-in-the-dark stars that have decorated children’s rooms. Stretching over ocean space as broad as 100,000 square kilometers, the light can, at times, even be seen from space.

This rare bioluminescent display was coined by sailors as “milky seas.” Despite being encountered for centuries, scientists still know very little about what causes this glowing effect because they are quite rare — they usually occur in the remote regions of the Indian Ocean, far from human eyes. A likely theory is that the glow comes from activity by a luminous microscopic bacteria called Vibrio harveyi.

To better predict when milky seas will occur, researchers at Colorado State University have compiled a database of sightings over the last 400 years. Described in the journal Earth and Space Science, the archive includes eyewitness reports from sailors, individual accounts submitted to the Marine Observer Journal over an 80-year period, and contemporary satellite data. This is the first such collection of data on milky seas in 30 years.

Together, it shows that sightings usually happen around the Arabian Sea and Southeast Asian waters and are statistically related to the Indian Ocean Dipole and the El Niño Southern Oscillation. Both of those climate phenomena are known to impact global weather patterns, prompting researchers to wonder how the dazzling phenomenon may be connected to those processes.

Justin Hudson, a Ph.D. student and the paper’s first author, said the database will help researchers better anticipate when and where a milky sea will occur. The goal, he said, is to get a research vessel out to the site in time to collect information about the biology and chemistry within a milky sea. Information about those variables could be helpful to connecting the event to broader Earth systems activity.

Hudson added that the regions where milky seas occur feature a lot of biological diversity and are important economically to fishing operations.

“It is really hard to study something if you have no data about it,” Hudson said. “To this point, there is only one known photograph at sea level that came from a chance encounter by a yacht in 2019. So, there is a lot left to learn about how and why this happens and what the impacts are to those areas that experience this.”

What are the milky seas and how do they form? Bioluminescence comes in many forms across nature. One of the most common examples is a firefly’s flickering taillight. With milky seas, though, researchers are still trying to understand what is actually happening at the sea surface.

One hint comes from a research vessel that had a chance encounter with a milky sea in 1985, which was able to collect a water sample. Researchers found that a specific strain of luminous bacteria was living on the surface of algae within a bloom — possibly causing an even glow in all directions. However, that is just one data point and could be misleading.

To bridge the gap in understanding, researchers have tried to leverage information gathered from sporadic satellite imagery. Hudson said that, because of the regions most associated with the phenomenon, it seems likely the light is due to a biological process related to the bacteria.

“The regions where this happens the most are around the northwest Indian Ocean near Somalia and Socotra, Yemen, with nearly 60% of all known events occurring there,” he said. “At the same time, we know the Indian monsoon’s phases drive biological activity in the region through changes in wind patterns and currents.”

It seems possible that milky seas could be an indication of a healthy ecosystem or distressed one — the bacteria suspected to be behind it are a known pest that can negatively impact fish and crustaceans.

Having this data ready allows us to begin answering questions about milky seas beyond hoping and praying a ship runs into one accidentally.”

Agriculture and Food

The Edible Aquatic Robot: Harnessing Nature’s Power to Monitor Waterways

An edible robot leverages a combination of biodegradable fuel and surface tension to zip around the water’s surface, creating a safe — and nutritious — alternative to environmental monitoring devices made from artificial polymers and electronics.

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The Edible Aquatic Robot is a groundbreaking innovation developed by EPFL scientists, who have successfully created a biodegradable and non-toxic device to monitor waterways. This remarkable invention leverages the Marangoni effect, which allows aquatic insects to propel themselves across the surface of water, to create a safe and efficient alternative to traditional environmental monitoring devices made from artificial polymers and electronics.

The robot’s clever design takes advantage of a chemical reaction within a tiny detachable chamber that produces carbon dioxide gas. This gas enters a fuel channel, forcing the fuel out and creating a sudden reduction in water surface tension that propels the robot forward. The device can move freely around the surface of the water for several minutes, making it an ideal solution for monitoring waterways.

What makes this invention even more remarkable is its edible nature. The robot’s outer structure is made from fish food with a 30% higher protein content and 8% lower fat content than commercial pellets. This not only provides strength and rigidity to the device but also acts as nourishment for aquatic wildlife at the end of its lifetime.

The EPFL team envisions deploying these robots in large numbers, each equipped with biodegradable sensors to collect environmental data such as water pH, temperature, pollutants, and microorganisms. The researchers have even fabricated ‘left turning’ and ‘right turning’ variants by altering the fuel channel’s asymmetric design, allowing them to disperse the robots across the water’s surface.

This work is part of a larger innovation in edible robotics, with the Laboratory of Intelligent Systems publishing several papers on edible devices, including edible soft actuators as food manipulators and pet food, fluidic circuits for edible computation, and edible conductive ink for monitoring crop growth. The potential applications of these devices are vast, from stimulating cognitive development in aquatic pets to delivering nutrients or medication to fish.

As EPFL PhD student Shuhang Zhang notes, “The replacement of electronic waste with biodegradable materials is the subject of intensive study, but edible materials with targeted nutritional profiles and function have barely been considered, and open up a world of opportunities for human and animal health.” This groundbreaking innovation in edible aquatic robots has the potential to revolutionize the way we monitor waterways and promote sustainable development.

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Earth & Climate

Unlocking Ocean Secrets: Scientists Unveil Interactive Map to Protect Migrating Marine Life

Scientists have launched an interactive global map to show the migratory patterns of more than 100 marine species in an effort to protect at-risk wildlife.

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Scientists have developed an innovative tool to revolutionize ocean conservation efforts. The Migratory Connectivity in the Ocean (MiCO) database, created by researchers from The University of Queensland and Duke University, provides a comprehensive global map of marine migratory patterns. This groundbreaking interactive tool aims to bridge information gaps for policymakers and conservationists, ultimately protecting at-risk wildlife.

Dr. Lily Bentley, from UQ’s Centre for Biodiversity and Conservation Science, explained that the online tool offers a freely accessible global view of marine migratory connectivity. “MiCO brings together thousands of records from over 1,300 sources to map how marine animals traverse the world’s oceans,” she said. The database covers 109 species, including birds, mammals, turtles, and fish.

Researchers discovered that many marine animals migrate through national waters and the high seas during their life cycles, exposing them to various threats across countries. Dr. Bentley highlighted the importance of cross-boundary cooperation in protecting these migratory species. “MiCO enables scientists, governments, and international organisations to understand how migratory marine species link regions and jurisdictions,” she said.

The intricate connectivity described in the system underscores the need for globally-aligned conservation efforts. Associate Professor Daniel Dunn, Centre director, emphasized that no country can fully protect migratory species on its own. “To protect these species effectively, nations must work together,” he said.

MiCO’s freely available models have already been identified as a valuable asset to inform the implementation of the recent High Seas Treaty, which seeks to safeguard biodiversity beyond national waters. The system also aligns with the Convention on Migratory Species’ goal of developing a global atlas of animal migration, an effort to which MiCO seeks to be a key contributor.

Researchers say more than two-thirds of marine migratory species are still unassessed and future expansions of MiCO are planned. Their ultimate goal is to provide the most comprehensive global baseline of connectivity generated by marine migratory species possible, so that conservation strategies are based on robust data. This research has been published in Nature Communications.

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Civil Engineering

The Sinking Cities of America: A Study Reveals Widespread Land Movement Across 28 Major U.S. Metropolises

A new study of the 28 most populous U.S. cities finds that all are sinking to one degree or another. The cities include not just those on the coasts, where relative sea level is a concern, but many in the interior. Furthermore, using newly granular data, the study finds that some cities are sinking at different rates in different spots, or sinking in some places and rising in others, potentially introducing stresses that could affect buildings and other infrastructure.

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The study, published in Nature Cities, reveals that all 28 most populous U.S. cities are experiencing some degree of land movement, with the majority sinking at varying rates due to a combination of factors including groundwater extraction, climate change, and human activities such as construction and urbanization.

Lead author Leonard Ohenhen, a postdoctoral researcher at Columbia Climate School’s Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, notes that as cities continue to grow, subsidence can become more pronounced, producing stresses on infrastructure that may exceed safety limits. “We will see more cities expand into subsiding regions,” he says.

The study uses satellite data to map land movements in the 28 cities, including Houston, which is experiencing some of the most rapid sinking, with over 40% of its area subsiding more than 5 millimeters per year. Other Texas cities, Fort Worth and Dallas, are also among the fastest-sinking, while areas around New York’s LaGuardia Airport and parts of Las Vegas, Washington, D.C., and San Francisco are experiencing localized fast-sinking zones.

Researchers found that groundwater removal for human use was responsible for 80% of overall sinkage, with compaction below ground level causing subsidence at the surface. Climate-induced droughts in some areas will likely worsen subsidence in the future, says Ohenhen.

The study also reveals that natural forces are at work in some areas, such as the weight of ancient ice sheets that once covered much of interior North America. Even today, some cities like New York, Indianapolis, Nashville, Philadelphia, Denver, Chicago, and Portland are still subsiding due to these bulges, with rates ranging from 1 to 3 millimeters per year.

The researchers emphasize that continued population growth and water usage will likely exacerbate subsidence in the future. They recommend that cities focus on solutions such as land raising, enhanced drainage systems, and green infrastructure to mitigate flooding, and retrofitting existing structures to address tilting hazards.

Ohenhen concludes, “We have to move to solutions.” The study was coauthored by researchers from various institutions and provides a valuable resource for policymakers and urban planners to address the challenges posed by subsidence in major American cities.

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